Saturday, 16 June 2012

University of Alabama


University of Alabama
 


 The higher education programs in Alabama include fourteen universities (four years of study), and high schools (two years of study), and seventeen private universities. There are two medical schools in the State (University of Alabama at Birmingham and University of South Alabama), two veterinary universities (Auburn University and Tuskegee University), a dental school (University of Alabama at Birmingham), College of Optometry (University of Alabama at Birmingham), two pharmacy schools (Auburn University and Samford University), and five law schools (University of Alabama school of Law, Birmingham school of Law, Cumberland School of Law, Miles Law School and the Thomas Goode Jones School of Law). 

The post-secondary public education in Alabama is overseen by the Alabama Commission on Higher Education.



University of Arkansas


University of Arkansas
 
 

 The University of Arkansas (in English University of Arkansas) is an American university, located in Fayetteville, Arkansas and founded in1871.

His motto is Latin Veritate Duce Progedi (to move forward with the truth for guide). It has 17,900 students. In sport, the Arkansas Razorbacks defend the colors of the institution in Southeastern Conference in NCAA.

The Razorbacks are among them Jamaican sprinter Veronica Campbell-Brown.
 

Monday, 11 June 2012

University of Arizona


University of Arizona



The University of Arizona (UA) is a public university located in Tucson, Arizona. It is the first university in the State of Arizona, founded in 1885 as the state was still a territory. In 2005, 37,036students were enrolled.


Among the most important programs of the university, there is science in optics, astronomy and astrophysics. The AU is one of the most distinguished universities by NASA with which it is involved in many space exploration programs. She is a member of space-grant created and sponsored by the U.S. Congress and which has several U.S. Universities to study space.

History of Arizona University


History of Arizona University


 
The creation of the University of Arizona was decreed in 1885 in Arizona Territory's Thieving Thirteenth Legislature (session representatives of the territories of Arizona who was not yet a State, to provide the region with public amenities: universities, colleges, prisons ...). The city of Tucson wanted to obtain the creation of the psychiatric hospital of the territory and its $ 100 000 endowment instead of $ 25 000 allocated for the construction of University (State University of Arizona located near Phoenix. It was established the same year but was at that time, a high school). The city officials arrived late in Prescott, where the assembly was held, due to flooding of the Salt River. Much of the most attractive public facilities have already been distributed, Tucson due to content themselves with his delegates equipment small. Nobody wanted to sell land for the establishment of the University. The municipality was preparing to return the money allocated to this project when two gamblers and a saloon owner decided to give a meadow. The first year class was held in 1891. There were 32 students in the Old Main (the building still in use, housing the executive offices).


 University

The University of Arizona offers 334 fields of study to get the Bachelors, Masters, Doctorate and professional degrees. The University of Arizona is the only CAP-10 not to use the system of pluses and minuses for its rating. The only possible grades are A, B,C, D, and F (fail). In 2004 discussions took place had to add the plus / minus notes (in fact a student who got 100/100 and another who got90/100 are credited to an A. With the new system would be the first A + and A-second). However in 2012 the system of four letters is still in force.


Sunday, 10 June 2012

Arizona University Campus


Arizona University Campus




The main campus covers about 1.5 square kilometers in central Tucson, about 1.6 miles northeast of downtown. It consists of 179 buildings. Most old buildings, including those of the Arizona State Museum and Centennial Hall were designed by Roy Place, a distinguished architect of the city. The latter used almost exclusively of red brick. Most building facades are still composed of this material.
The campus is divided roughly into four quarters. North and South are divided by a large lawn called the Mall which runs the Old Main in the west to Campbell Avenue to the east (one of the main north-south artery of the city). The East and West Campus are separated by Highland Avenue and the Student Union Memorial Center.


The buildings of science and mathematics are scattered in the South West. Disciplines "cross" (common to most courses) in the South East, art and social science in Northwest. Departments optical and space science and the main library for their focus to the east.

The North Campus is bounded by Speedway Boulevard a major east-west axes of Tucson. However, since the 1980s, a number of University buildings were erected north of this axis, and extending in an area traditionally dedicated to housing (apartments, houses).The university has also purchased a number of housing units to accommodate more students. The South Campus is in turn bounded by Sixth Street. To the south is composed of single-family neighborhoods often rented to students.

Park Avenue is traditionally considered the western boundary of the campus. A long stone wall along a large portion of the street delineates the boundary. Only the Old Main Gate (Gate of Old Main, the main entrance of the University) can enter through the West.Around this street students, faculty and staff can find many shops: shops, bookstores, bars, banks, tea room, and the main Fast food chains. Note that most buildings were built dedicated to trade in the 1920s and restored in the late 1990s.

The oldest buildings on campus were built between Park Avenue and west of the 'Old Main' (before 1940). The expansion of the University has made to the East between 1940 and 1980.


The Student Union Memorial Center (the center of life for students) is located immediately adjacent to the 'Mall' (north of it). It was completely rebuilt between 2000 and 2003 from 25 to 000 m² 37 600 m² on four floors. It now includes 14 restaurants (including a dining room surrounded by the major fast food chains), a new library on two floors, 23 meeting rooms (for the various clubs), eight lounge areas (including one dedicated to the USS Arizona, a computer room, a post office, a reprographics room, and an arcade. One of the two bells rescued from the USS Arizona attack on Pearl Harbor is placed in the clock tower of the Student Union Memorial Center (she arrived on campus in July 1946). It strikes seven times every third Wednesday of the month at 12:07 (time of the sinking of the battleship December 7, 1941) and after each game of American Football home.